
Keep Kids Hydrated and Healthy with the Power of US Cranberries
To tackle this, Dr. Patel recommends adding US Cranberries to a child's daily diet. 'US Cranberries are naturally rich in dietary fiber and antioxidants that support digestion and help restore gut flora. Plus, they have a great taste that children love,' he shares. He suggests incorporating small portions of dried cranberries into everyday meals like daliya, curd, or even snacks for a delicious and nutritious boost.
Dr. Patel urges parents to include this simple yet effective remedy in their summer routine. US Cranberries are easily available at local dry fruit stores and major e-commerce platforms. 'If the gut is good, the child is good.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


United News of India
a day ago
- United News of India
No ban on paracetamol drug, says Govt in Parliament
New Delhi, Aug 5 (UNI) The Central Drugs Standard Control Organisation (CDSCO) has not banned the commonly used paracetamol drug in India, the Government told Rajya Sabha today. Replying to a written query in Rajya Sabha, Union Minister of State for Chemicals and Fertilisers Anupriya Patel said, 'the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare has informed that the CDSCO is not in receipt of information about rumours' of the regulatory body banning paracetamol. Noting that 'paracetamol is not banned in the country', Patel said that 'various Fixed Dose Combinations, including such combinations of paracetamol with other drugs, have been banned in the country'. The Minister also informed the Upper House that the government has rolled out the free drugs service initiative under the National Health Mission (NHM) under the Union Health Ministry. She also pointed out that this aims to ensure availability of essential drugs and reduce out-of-pocket expenditure of patients visiting the public health facilities, including government hospitals and rural primary health centres. She elaborated that support is available for procurement of drugs and strengthening or setting up of robust systems of procurement, quality assurance, supply chain management and warehousing, prescription audit and grievance redressal among others. Patel said the Union Health Ministry has also recommended a facility-wise essential medicines list to be made available at public healthcare facilities, including government hospitals and rural primary health centres. 'The recommended Essential Medicines List for Sub Health Centres, Primary Health Centres, Community Health Centres, Sub-District Hospitals and District Hospitals consists of 106, 172, 300, 318 and 381 drugs respectively, with flexibility to States to add more medicines,' she noted. Also, 'MSO has 1,152 registered indenters across India, including government hospitals and rural primary health centres, who may place demands for supply of drugs to MSO/GMSDs through MSO-DVDMS application software four times in a financial year,' Patel added. UNI AJ SSP


Indian Express
a day ago
- Indian Express
Gujarat to prepare SOPs to stop duplicate, fake medicines from entering state
The Gujarat government, in a statement on Tuesday, said it is in the process of formulating Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs) to enhance detection and seizures of duplicate and fake medicines from entering the state. 'Recently, it came to the notice of the state government that fake medicines are entering (Gujarat). They are being sourced from outside the state and sold in some places inside the state. Gujarat's Food and Drug Control Administration (FDCA) has also taken action by conducting on-site inspections. To make this more stringent and strict, the government will prepare an SOP for the inspection of medicines coming from outside the state into Gujarat,' Health Minister Rushikesh Patel was quoted as saying. The SOPs would make registration of imported medicines mandatory, require registration of transporters carrying medicines and cancellation of licenses of chemists or wholesalers who are caught in such dealing with fake medicines. The SOPs will also require people to strictly follow the Drugs and Cosmetics Act. Besides, expensive and 'fast-moving' medicines will be closely monitored. The state government will also start three new testing labs in addition to the existing NABL-certified laboratory in Vadodara. To intensify on-site testing, 10 sets of state-of-the-art hand-held devices (Raman Spectrometer with Advanced Technology) will be purchased. Further, a flying squad will be formed. Patel added that with the implementation of these SOPs, Gujarat will become the first state in the country to adopt 'zero-tolerance' towards duplicate and fake medicines. 'The government will take intensive action to prevent fake/spurious/counterfeit medicines from outside the state in Gujarat. In the last 4 years, raids were conducted to prevent counterfeit medicines/cosmetics in the state and more than Rs 6 crore (worth of) medicines/cosmetics were seized…about 75 persons/firms were found involved and action was taken against them,' a statement read. Speaking about the type of activities unearthed so far, the statement said, 'In most of these cases, persons who do not have a valid license for buying, selling and storing medicines are involved and investigation has also revealed that in most of the cases, counterfeit medicines come from outside the state.'


News18
6 days ago
- News18
Maharashtra approves Modern Pharmacology course for homoeopaths: Govt
New Delhi, Aug 1 (PTI) One-year certificate course in Modern Pharmacology (CCMP) has been approved by the Maharashtra government for registered Homoeopathic practitioners, allowing them to provide allopathic treatment to patients only when needed, Minister of State for Health Anupriya Patel told the Lok Sabha on Friday. She was responding to a question on whether a State Medical Council has proposed to permit Homoeopaths to practice allopathy with a one-year bridge course in pharmacology. Patel, in a written reply, said that the Maharashtra government has approved a one-year Certificate Course in Modern Pharmacology (CCMP) for Registered Homoeopathic Practitioners. This will allow them to provide allopathic treatment to patients only when it is needed and to the extent of learning through the CCMP course. 'Maharashtra Medical Council have to keep a separate register for practitioners who have completed CCMP. The practitioner also has to be registered in the Homoeopathy Council, " Patel said in her written reply. PTI PLB HIG HIG view comments First Published: August 01, 2025, 15:30 IST Disclaimer: Comments reflect users' views, not News18's. Please keep discussions respectful and constructive. Abusive, defamatory, or illegal comments will be removed. News18 may disable any comment at its discretion. By posting, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.